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Chewy7324, to linuxmemes in I know it's not safe, but it's doesn't stop me

You’re right, a peer-review system would be a net positive. Should updates be reviewed before publishing? This means updates take longer to arrive.

Chewy7324, to linuxmemes in I know it's not safe, but it's doesn't stop me

Agreed. People should learn to read PKGBUILDs, but given how popular Arch(-based) distributions are, I do think many people won’t bother. Afterall, many people download random things all the time.

Chewy7324, to linuxmemes in I know it's not safe, but it's doesn't stop me

I guess it can be assumed that a good number of people read the PKGBUILDs, so at some point malware would be found. A peer-reviewing system would give people a false sense of security, since the AUR is a user repository, where breakage should be expected (compared to the official repos).

Chewy7324, to linuxmemes in I know it's not safe, but it's doesn't stop me

Just verify

requires basic programming knowledge or at least some time to get familiar with PKGBUILDs, and then they have to take the time to read it.

Yes, I agree people should at least look up where it loads data from, but people are lazy.

Chewy7324, to linuxmemes in Where they went Tim?

Fortnite uses both BattleEye and EAC, so it’s at least multiple clicks, depending on the implementation even more.

Chewy7324, to linux in Flatpak can look daunting...

In my experience updates aren’t that big. The flatpak cli ux is just confusing to read how much data actually has to be downloaded because of deduplication.

Chewy7324, to linux in How many of you run a Linux phone (Pine64, Librem etc) as your daily driver?

My bank disagrees that SMS tan is secure enough 2FA and doesn’t support it.

Chewy7324, to linux in How many of you run a Linux phone (Pine64, Librem etc) as your daily driver?

There has to be a device to develop support for calling. Since there’re multiple open source phone projects it’s also not simple to just write an implementation for them. Additionally carriers don’t work all the same (different bands, …), so it’s really not easy to solve with the few resources available. As far as I know much of the development on these phone OS is done by volunteers and pine64 isn’t a big established company either.

Chewy7324, to linux in How many of you run a Linux phone (Pine64, Librem etc) as your daily driver?

Performance and bugs might still be a problem with these relatively young projects. But if all you need is a browser I do believe it might be worth a shot.

In the EU 2FA for banking is required by law which usually comes down to either an Android/iOS app or a chipTAN device. That’s why browser isn’t an option for me. Sadly I don’t think waydroid passes the basicIntegrity check of AOSP [1], so emulation is out of the picture too.

[1] grapheneos.org/usage#banking-apps

Chewy7324, to linux in December Updates: The Spirit of COSMIC

You mean asdf isn’t a good title? /s

Chewy7324, to linux in How many of you run a Linux phone (Pine64, Librem etc) as your daily driver?

I’ve bought a Nexus 4 to play around with Ubuntu Touch many years ago, but I really don’t think I could daily drive even a more powerful Linux phone. Many apps from messengers to banking apps are Android/iOS only, so it’d be really inconvenient to use — not to mention problems with calling and a not-so-great camera.

Almost all things I want to do on a phone are possible with a Pixel + GrapheneOS, which also makes an open source, secure and private phone OS.

Usually ssh’ing into a server through termux is all I need, altough it’d be cool to be able to plug my phone into a monitor and have a desktop with me all the time. But it being “cool” is the problem, as it’s not useful day to fay for me. If I need a pc I’ll take my laptop. I’ll probably try it at some point, but that’s many years into the future.

Chewy7324, to linux in Fedora 40 Will Enable Systemd Service Security Hardening

This is great and already used on some distros like NixOS for many services. Regular users won’t notice this change.

Chewy7324, to linux in December Updates: The Spirit of COSMIC

[…] you can now set a shortcut to move entire workspaces to another display as well.

Awesome! This makes working with multiple workspaces on multiple monitors so much better. For some reason it’s missing on all DE’s/OS I’ve tried and only found on some tiling compositors like sway and hyprland.

Linux 6.6.6 has also been released, bringing about the end of days, raining fire upon the lands, and setting in motion a new era some may call: 2024. May the cosmic entities save us all.

Great to see the beastly Linux kernel being acknowledged. Happy Holiday!

Chewy7324, to linux in Optimising Ubuntu performance on amd64 architecture

It seems multiple Linux distributions are considering to update their x86-64 baseline architecture. This could improve performance, at the cost of hardware compatibility.

…nixos.org/…/pre-rfc-gradual-transition-of-nixos-…

Chewy7324, to linux in Kernel 6.6.6 is out 😈

It’s great to see to what lengths Microsoft goes to keep backwards compatibility. Compared to how a minor glibc update broke Linux apps without much warning. Without supporting legacy workflows I don’t think Microsoft would’ve had the market share they have today.

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